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ANKARA: Apology Organizers Could Face Charges

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  • ANKARA: Apology Organizers Could Face Charges

    APOLOGY ORGANIZERS COULD FACE CHARGES

    Hurriyet
    March 4 2009
    Turkey

    ANKARA - Criminal proceedings can in fact be launched against
    the organizers of an online campaign to apologize to Armenians for
    incidents that occurred in 1915, the high criminal court in Ankara's
    Sincan disrict ruled Monday.

    The court's decision overturned an earlier ruling by the Ankara
    prosecutor's office that had rejected demands to bring criminal charges
    against the organizers. Prosecutors are now free to seek the permission
    of Justice Minister Mehmet Ali Å~^ahin to launch an investigation.

    Campaign architect Cengiz Aktar suggested that the Justice Minister
    would not green-light such an investigation, but said Å~^ahin may be
    drawn in two different directions. "While the upcoming elections might
    incite the minister [to issue] an investigation permit, pressure from
    the United States on human rights might lead him not to," Aktar told
    the Hurriyet Daily News & Economic Review yesterday. "Both Europe
    and the United States are aware of the importance of the campaign."

    Freedom of thought

    In response to a petition calling for the organizers of the Internet
    campaign to be penalized, the public prosecutor's office launched
    a probe in January. It ruled that there was no need for criminal
    proceedings, saying that opposing views were protected as freedom of
    thought in democratic societies. The petition was submitted by six
    Ankara residents who claim the campaign insults the Turkish nation,
    an illegal act under Article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code, or TCK.

    Launching an investigation under Article 301 requires the permission
    of the Justice Ministry, which the high criminal court can now
    request. Justice Minister Mehmet Ali Å~^ahin had previously stated that
    the campaign was a matter of the organizers' own discretion, saying:
    "What is important for me is the approach and policy of the Republic
    of Turkey."

    The "I apologize" campaign was launched on Dec. 15. Though it has
    drawn harsh criticism within the country, approximately 29,000 people,
    including many intellectuals and journalists, have signed the petition,
    which reads, in part: "My conscience does not accept the insensitivity
    showed to and the denial of the Great Catastrophe that the Armenians
    were subjected to in 1915."

    Armenia claims that up to 1.5 million Armenians were systematically
    killed in 1915 under the reign of the Ottoman Empire, while Turkey
    denies this, saying that any deaths were the result of civil strife
    that erupted when Armenians took up arms for independence in Eastern
    Anatolia.
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